Forbes Lists

Profile

K+S AG operates as a holding company, which is engaged in the production and distribution of standard and specialty fertilizers. It operates through the following segments: Potash and Magnesium Products, Nitrogen Fertilizers, Salt Business, and Complementary Business. The Potash and Magnesium Products segment extracts potash and magnesium crude salt which are further processed to create intermediate or end products. The Nitrogen Fertilizers segment markets nitrogenous fertilizers suited for agriculture and special crops. The Salt Business segment supplies food grade, industrial, and de-icing salts. The Complementary Business segment provides recycling and waste management services. K+S was founded in 1889 and is headquartered in Kassel, Germany. More »

More on Forbes

The best financial advice for the growing number of Baby Boomers eagerly approaching retirement is: “Don’t.”

That’s because a decade of dismal stock market returns, curtailed employer pension plans, poor saving habits, and plunging home values means that fewer than half of those now approaching retirement have enough money to retire read »

After Facebook’s messy initial public offering last month, the pundits (among them, billionaire Marc Cuban in his blog here) predicted it would turn individual investors off of the stock market. Sorry, but that’s a lot like saying that a looming Washington D.C. standoff over taxes and the deficit will lower Americans’ opinion read »

While not always easy to think about, inheritances are a part of the financial pictures for many baby boomers. Handling an inheritance sometimes requires thought and a game plan, and it is a topic that can be too easily set aside to be dealt with in the future.

Below are steps to think through after receiving an inheritance to make it a read »

What you can–and can’t–do with an employer-sponsored 401(k) retirement savings plan depends on how old you are. Miss one of the milestones and you’re doing a big disservice to your retirement kitty. Do you know when you can start saving, how much you can save, when you can take out money penalty-free, and how you can postpone required read »

Do you know how much you’re paying for your 401(k)? If you’re like 71% of people in a recent survey, you may not even have realized that you’re paying 401(k) fees. But just last week, the Los Angeles Times cited a new study claiming the average couple could end up paying over $150k in fees in their 401(k)s over their read »

The first step toward recovery is admitting failure. The May jobs report says loud and clear that it is time for the Obama Administration and the supporters of its economic game plan to admit their policies of increased government spending, targeted and temporary tax relief, and increased regulation of the private sector have failed to read »

There are too many hidden expenses layered in them that benefit middlemen, not you. Most workers have no idea they’re being bamboozled, nor do they even know to ask how much they are being fleeced. It’s one of the biggest skim games in financial services and far outshadows the read »

I recently reviewed Julian Block’s Tax Tips For Marriage And Divorce. He has provided me with another guest post, this one with some advice oriented to divorced individuals, although, frankly, most of the advice is more broadly applicable.

Once upon a time, people stopped working at age 65 and enjoyed years of golf and grandchildren funded by a reliable monthly income from corporate pension and health care benefits supplemented by government health care and Social Security. In 2012, that fairy tale has become a joke. Here are six reasons you’ll never retire.

Advisor Jesse Anderson explains his firm’s strategy for identifying ETFs with efficient options markets, thereby capitalizing on inherent volatility. He discusses one of the firm’s core ETF positions, and a sector ETF he likes right now.

Do you ever feel like the world is conspiring against your ability to retire? Some people even feel like retirement has become unattainable and obsolete. Joe Mont of The Street has a post in Forbes discussing 5 of these “external, uncontrollable” forces working against us. While we may not be able to control them, there are ways to read »

The dividends of master limited partnerships have attracted a number of investors in an era of volatile equities trading. But tax implications have kept others away. Darren Schuringa tells why his ETF mitigates those tax concerns, while giving them exposure to the asset class.

Does your 401(k) suck? You are about to find out. Whether you are a participant in a plan, or a plan sponsor, new Department of Labor regulations require that, perhaps for the very first time, you are about to get the information that will let you determine how good or bad your retirement plan is.

The following article by Dan Wiener chief executive of Boston’s Adviser Investments was taken from the most recent edition of his newsletter The Independent Adviser For Vanguard Investors. As I have mentioned in previous posts Dan is the foremost authority on Vanguard funds.